Nick Ut

Photographer

Birthday March 29, 1951

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Bình Quới, Châu Thành, Long An, French Indochina, French Union

Age 72 years old

Nationality Vietnam

#56102 Most Popular

1951

Huỳnh Công Út, known professionally as Nick Ut (born March 29, 1951), is a Vietnamese-American photographer who worked for the Associated Press (AP) in Los Angeles.

1972

The Terror of War, also colloquially called Napalm Girl, is Ut's best-known photograph and features a naked 9-year-old girl, Phan Thị Kim Phúc, running toward the camera from a South Vietnamese napalm strike that mistakenly hit Trảng Bàng village instead of nearby North Vietnamese troops on June 8, 1972.

Before delivering his film with the photograph, Ut took Kim Phúc to the hospital.

The publication of the photograph was delayed due to the AP bureau's debate about transmitting a naked girl's photograph over the wire:

"... an editor at the AP rejected the photo of Kim Phuc running down the road without clothing because it showed frontal nudity. Pictures of nudes of all ages and sexes, and especially frontal views were an absolute no-no at the Associated Press in 1972 ... Horst argued by telex with the New York head-office that an exception must be made, with the compromise that no close-up of the girl Kim Phuc alone would be transmitted. The New York photo editor, Hal Buell, agreed that the news value of the photograph overrode any reservations about nudity."

Audiotapes of then-president Richard Nixon in conversation with his chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman, show that Nixon doubted the veracity of the photograph, musing whether it may have been "fixed".

Ut still maintains contact with Kim Phúc, who now resides in Ajax, Ontario, Canada.

1973

He won both the 1973 Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography and the 1973 World Press Photo of the Year for his 1972 photograph The Terror of War, depicting children running away from a napalm bombing attack during the Vietnam War.

2007

His photos of a crying Paris Hilton in the back seat of a Los Angeles County Sheriff's cruiser on June 8, 2007, were published worldwide; however, Ut was photographing Hilton alongside photographer Karl Larsen.

Two photographs emerged; the more famous photograph of Hilton was credited to Ut despite being Larsen's photo.

2012

On the 40th anniversary of that Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph in September 2012, Ut became only the third person inducted into the Leica Hall of Fame for his contributions to photojournalism.

2016

In September 2016, a Norway newspaper published an open letter to Mark Zuckerberg after censorship was imposed on this photograph placed on the newspaper's Facebook page.

Half of the ministers in the Norwegian government shared the photograph on their Facebook pages, among them prime minister Erna Solberg from the Conservative Party.

Several of the Facebook posts, including the Prime Minister's post, were deleted by Facebook, but later that day, Facebook decided to allow the photo.

Ut is a United States citizen and is married with two children in Los Angeles.

2017

On March 29, 2017, he retired from the AP.

On January 13, 2021, Ut became the first journalist to receive the National Medal of Arts, the highest award given to artists and arts patrons by the United States federal government.

Born in Long An, Vietnam (then part of the French Indochina), Ut began to take photographs for the Associated Press when he was 16, just after his older brother Huynh Thanh My, another AP photographer, was killed in Vietnam.

Ut himself was wounded three different times in the war in his knee, arm, and stomach.

Ut has since worked for the Associated Press in Tokyo, South Korea, and Hanoi.